Poor and Proud, or the Fortunes of Katy Redburn: a Story for Young Folks by Oliver Optic
page 46 of 213 (21%)
page 46 of 213 (21%)
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a needy tenant, she must be just to her agent.
"It is now half-past ten," continued Mrs. Gordon. "You shall remain here, my child, and I will send Michael down to Colvin Court to inquire into the situation of your mother. He must be impartial for he knows nothing about the case." "Thank you, ma'am," said Katy, with a promptness which assured Grace, if not her mother, that the little girl was honest. Mrs. Gordon rang the bell, and when Michael answered the summons, she attended him to the street door, where she instructed him to call upon Mrs. Redburn, and also to inquire of the grocer at the corner, and of her neighbors, what sort of a person she was. The lady returned to the sitting-room when he had gone, and asked Katy a great many questions about herself and her mother, and thus nearly an hour was consumed, at the end of which time Michael returned. Katy had answered all the lady's questions fairly, though without betraying her family history, which her mother had cautioned her to keep to herself, that she was prepared to receive a favorable report from her man. "Well, Michael, did you find the woman at home?" asked Mrs. Gordon, as the man presented himself. "Indeed, I deed, marm." "What was she doing?" |
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